Turkey
shot down a Syrian fighter jet Sunday after the warplane strayed into
its airspace, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said.
"Our
F-16s went up in the air and shot that plane down. Why? Because if you
violate my airspace, then from now on, our slap will be hard," Erdogan
told supporters at a campaign rally.
State-run media in Syria
called the shoot-down an act of "blatant aggression" and said the downed
plane was over northern Syria at the time.
The pilot ejected and was rescued, SANA reported, citing a military source.
The
Turkish armed forces website reported that two Syrian planes were
spotted and were warned four times about approaching Turkish airspace as
they flew north in Syrian airspace.
One plane left the area but
the second plane continued, and entered Turkish airspace by
approximately 1 kilometer (six-tenths of a mile). The plane turned west
and continued to fly into Turkish airspace, according to the site.
One
of the two Turkish F-16s patrolling the area launched a missile at the
Syrian plane and it crashed in the area of the town of Keseb, in Syrian
territory near the border, Turkish armed forces said.
Syrian
government forces have battled rebel fighters in Syria's Latakia
province since Friday morning after the opposition launched an offensive
in the heavily Alawite populated areas of the country's Mediterranean
coast.
The province is still under government control despite some pockets of armed resistance.
Warplanes
have been striking at the opposition in Latakia, the home province of
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, in hopes of preventing a rebel
advance.
One of the pitched battles on Friday occurred in Keseb,
just 3 kilometers (2 miles) from Turkey. Sunday's SANA report said the
Syrian jets were pursuing rebels in the area.
Syria shot down a Turkish plane in 2012, and the two sides have exchanged artillery fire in the past.
In
October 2012, Turkey fired on Syrian government targets in response to
the shelling of a Turkish border town in which five civilians were
killed.


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